Effects of water salinity on the growth of hybrid red tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus (Peters) × Oreochromis niloticus (Linnaeus), cultured under controlled laboratory conditions
Main Article Content
Abstract
GROWTH RATE, AS DETERMINED BY LENGTH AND WEIGHT, FOR THE HYBRID TILAPIA (OREOCHROMIS MOSSAMBICUS — O. NILOTICUS) WAS DETERMINED. TILAPIA HYBRIDS WERE SEX REVERSED (ALL MALE) WITH a-METHYL-TESTOSTERONE, ADAPTED TO 15”°, 25”° AND 35”° SALINITIES, AND CULTURED OVER A PERIOD OF 27 WEEKS. A CONTROL GROUP WAS CULTURED IN FRESHWATER, AND ALL CULTURE CONDITIONS WERE CARRIED OUT IN DUPLICATES. STOCKING DENSITY WAS SET AT 50 FISH/M3. GROWTH RATES AMONG 25”° AND 35”° SALINITIES VS FRESHWATER WERE SIGNIFICANTLY DIFFERENT (P < 0.05). HOWEVER, NO SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES (P > 0.05) WERE OBSERVED IN FRESHWATER VS 15”° SALINITY. FINAL WEIGHT MEANS WERE: 575.07 G IN FRESHWATER, 486.86 G IN 15”° SALINITY, 367.35 G IN 25”° SALINITY, AND 358.58 G IN 35”° SALINITY. DUE TO PRODUCTION PERFORMANCE OBSERVED, IT IS FEASIBLE TO CONCLUDE THAT THERE ARE ADAPTIVE PROCESSES INVOLVED WHEN TILAPIA HYBRIDS ARE CULTURED IN INCREASED ENVIRONMENTAL SALINITY. HENCE, IF OPTIMAL GROWTH IS EXPECTED, THESE TILAPIA HYBRIDS WILL OFFER BETTER PRODUCTIVE PARAMETERS IF CULTURED IN SALINITIES NOT GREATER THAN 15”°.
Keywords:
TILAPIA [OREOCHROMIS MOSSAMBICUS (PETERS) X OREOCHROMIS NILOTICUS (LINNAEUS)] CULTURE SALINITY GROWTH-PERFORMANCE ADAPTATION
Article Details
License

Veterinaria México OA by Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
Based on a work at http://www.revistas.unam.mx
- All articles in Veterinaria México OA re published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC-BY 4.0). With this license, authors retain copyright but allow any user to share, copy, distribute, transmit, adapt and make commercial use of the work, without needing to provide additional permission as long as appropriate attribution is made to the original author or source.
- By using this license, all Veterinaria México OAarticles meet or exceed all funder and institutional requirements for being considered Open Access.
- Authors cannot use copyrighted material within their article unless that material has also been made available under a similarly liberal license.